Abstract

BackgroundActin is required for the gene expression and morphogenesis of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a clinically important Pneumovirus of the Paramyxoviridae family. In HEp-2 cells, RSV infection also induces actin stress fibers, which may be important in the immunopathology of the RSV disease. Profilin, a major regulator of actin polymerization, stimulates viral transcription in vitro. Thus, we tested the role of profilin in RSV growth and RSV-actin interactions in cultured cells (ex vivo).ResultsWe tested three cell lines: HEp-2 (human), A549 (human), and L2 (rat). In all three, RSV grew well and produced fused cells (syncytium), and two RSV proteins, namely, the phosphoprotein P and the nucleocapsid protein N, associated with profilin. In contrast, induction of actin stress fibers by RSV occurred in HEp-2 and L2 cells, but not in A549. Knockdown of profilin by RNA interference had a small effect on viral macromolecule synthesis but strongly inhibited maturation of progeny virions, cell fusion, and induction of stress fibers.ConclusionsProfilin plays a cardinal role in RSV-mediated cell fusion and viral maturation. In contrast, interaction of profilin with the viral transcriptional proteins P and N may only nominally activate viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. Stress fiber formation is a cell-specific response to infection, requiring profilin and perhaps other signaling molecules that are absent in certain cell lines. Stress fibers per se play no role in RSV replication in cell culture. Clearly, the cellular architecture controls multiple steps of host-RSV interaction, some of which are regulated by profilin.

Highlights

  • Actin is required for the gene expression and morphogenesis of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a clinically important Pneumovirus of the Paramyxoviridae family

  • When an extract of A549 cells was passed through the P column, a few additional bands of 30–34 kDa size range besides the 14 kDa profilin were found to associate to the column

  • Detailed studies of infection of such cells by RSV reveals that profilin is needed for cell fusion, which is a universal response RSV infection in all cell lines tested

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Summary

Introduction

Actin is required for the gene expression and morphogenesis of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a clinically important Pneumovirus of the Paramyxoviridae family. In HEp-2 cells, RSV infection induces actin stress fibers, which may be important in the immunopathology of the RSV disease. A major regulator of actin polymerization, stimulates viral transcription in vitro. We tested the role of profilin in RSV growth and RSV-actin interactions in cultured cells (ex vivo). It is appreciated that a large number of cellular parasites co-opt actin for their gene expression and replication in the host cell [3,4]. Due to its primary role in pediatric respiratory disease, and the enormous human and economic toll it exacts throughout the world, the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and its interaction with the host cell have received serious attention. RSV is a member of the Pneumovirus genus in the Paramyxoviridae family, and (page number not for citation purposes)

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